Scientists name Puerto Rico water mite after JLo

Pop singer Jennifer Lopez may be thinking life is funny after a group of scientists named a water mite in her honor after discovering a new species near Puerto Rico.

The music of the Bronx, New York-born entertainer who has Puerto Rican roots was a hit with the group while they wrote about their findings, biologist Vladimir Pesic said in an email yesterday.

“The reason behind the unusual choice of name for the new species is . . . simple: J.Lo’s songs and videos kept the team in a continuous good mood when writing the manuscript and watching World Cup Soccer 2014,” said Pesic, who works at the University of Montenegro.

Pesic calls it a small token of gratitude for the singer of hits such as “Ain’t It Funny,” “I Luh Ya Papi” and his personal favorite, “All I Have.”

He’s the corresponding author of the study that was published Tuesday in the peer-reviewed online journal ZooKeys.

Pesic and other scientists collected the newly baptized Litarachna lopezae mite from a coral reef in Mona Passage, a treacherous body of water that separates Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic. The species was found at a depth of nearly 230 feet, the greatest depth that pontarachnid mites have been found until now, according to their study.